Dave S.
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Feb 28, 2017
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thetexan
we know that standard TO mims are 1 or 1/2 vis with expected climb gradient of 200 fpnm and a diverse turn no lower than 400 agl.
Let’s take another example. Fort Worth Borland.
STD/w min climb of 512’ per NM to 1300.
Question: what happens at 1300? Careful how you answer.
Look at the associated DP...Climb heading 165 to 1400 before turning right.
Consider this. A TO minimum seems logically to be a minimum set of conditions required to release the brakes for TO. The DP seems logically to be a set of instructions on how to fly the newly airborne aircraft after having released the brakes.
I talked to a POI at DAL FSDO as well as the individual at the operations group at ASW HQ iin Ft Worth that was responsible for the design of the area airport IAPs and neither gave the same answer and neither wa satisfactory.
If 400 ft in the standard TO min means you may now turn on course then 1300 should mean the same in the Bourland example. Then why 1400 in the DP? If you answer “...before turning right” then 1300 doesn’t really mean turn on just any old course as with the 400 example. It means turn on any course but right in which case you must go higher to 1400 before turning right.
If the TO min is really a minimum rather than a set of instructions then you would translate it like this....before releasing the brakes you must have either 1 or 1/2 mike viz, and your aircraft must be capable of climbing at 200 fpnm at least to 400. If that’s the case then you have your minimums and you can go. If not you have to go to an alternate minimum.
Anyway, The logic doesn’t follow from one minimum to another when DPs are involved.
So, what happens at 1300? Can I now stop climbing at 512 and go to 200 fpnm? Can I turn in any direction? What happens at 1400? Why the seemingly contradiction? If 1400 is the turn altitude then what is 1300 if not simply the altitude to which the cg must be maintained?
There is nothing in TERPs or 8260.46 that answers this.
Your thoughts
Tex
Let’s take another example. Fort Worth Borland.
STD/w min climb of 512’ per NM to 1300.
Question: what happens at 1300? Careful how you answer.
Look at the associated DP...Climb heading 165 to 1400 before turning right.
Consider this. A TO minimum seems logically to be a minimum set of conditions required to release the brakes for TO. The DP seems logically to be a set of instructions on how to fly the newly airborne aircraft after having released the brakes.
I talked to a POI at DAL FSDO as well as the individual at the operations group at ASW HQ iin Ft Worth that was responsible for the design of the area airport IAPs and neither gave the same answer and neither wa satisfactory.
If 400 ft in the standard TO min means you may now turn on course then 1300 should mean the same in the Bourland example. Then why 1400 in the DP? If you answer “...before turning right” then 1300 doesn’t really mean turn on just any old course as with the 400 example. It means turn on any course but right in which case you must go higher to 1400 before turning right.
If the TO min is really a minimum rather than a set of instructions then you would translate it like this....before releasing the brakes you must have either 1 or 1/2 mike viz, and your aircraft must be capable of climbing at 200 fpnm at least to 400. If that’s the case then you have your minimums and you can go. If not you have to go to an alternate minimum.
Anyway, The logic doesn’t follow from one minimum to another when DPs are involved.
So, what happens at 1300? Can I now stop climbing at 512 and go to 200 fpnm? Can I turn in any direction? What happens at 1400? Why the seemingly contradiction? If 1400 is the turn altitude then what is 1300 if not simply the altitude to which the cg must be maintained?
There is nothing in TERPs or 8260.46 that answers this.
Your thoughts
Tex